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Dec 3, 2012
12/12
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>>host: vertigo to california real joanna believe it is 3:00 a.m. and up morning she has to be excited when a welcome joanne welcome to hsn and thank you for getting up early with us. good morning. >>caller: hi intelliwhite purchases cake lester microcurrent melded to me by fax at i got it smudged up and i did not know that you guys sold it because i was so excited it was so delicious even know was a mess which still aided and we had the cheesecake it was the absolute best cheesecake i had my life. to try the other two. >>host: c13 to order today joanne? >>caller: i ordered the tiramisu andocolate trouble cakes. >>host: a luggage joanne. >>guest: thank. >>host: you enjoy it whenever you receive and they give iran. >>guest: i have a great and she is my grandmother's sister and every year she would said can i have first and i know where progress was to start opening up my guess i opened them upmuch good stuff to enjoy so i start now enjoying christmas gifts. >>host: we do something that is delivery direct an you the paper this and send it to anywhere
>>host: vertigo to california real joanna believe it is 3:00 a.m. and up morning she has to be excited when a welcome joanne welcome to hsn and thank you for getting up early with us. good morning. >>caller: hi intelliwhite purchases cake lester microcurrent melded to me by fax at i got it smudged up and i did not know that you guys sold it because i was so excited it was so delicious even know was a mess which still aided and we had the cheesecake it was the absolute best...
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Dec 24, 2012
12/12
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chicago and houses and office buildings and mines from a vermont, new york, illinois, missouri, te xas, california. she would help the bank when times were bad. she was the largest individual lender to the new york city government. she lived in the gilded age when society lived lavishly but she rebelled the opulence. she loved her children and friends, lived a simple life. she was caring of those who befriended her and she would show great affection and would say because he does not know how rich i am. living her life as she deemed best to have a career and a mother to her clever investing she showed that women were the equal of any man with newspapers around the world they claimed her the queen up on wall street. and she was "the richest woman in america". there are a lot of sayings of her words of wisdom. she did have a good sense of humor. if you have any questions i would love to answer. >> do you have evidence. >> know. that they should have the right to vote. i found usually successful women like gertrude bell did not believe of women's suffrage, margaret thatcher did not, in zero gandhi the
chicago and houses and office buildings and mines from a vermont, new york, illinois, missouri, te xas, california. she would help the bank when times were bad. she was the largest individual lender to the new york city government. she lived in the gilded age when society lived lavishly but she rebelled the opulence. she loved her children and friends, lived a simple life. she was caring of those who befriended her and she would show great affection and would say because he does not know how...
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Dec 29, 2012
12/12
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it did not include california because california, as you know, was already a state. the crescent -- the question was so critical because it had to do with the feature slavery and the future of southern power in the nation. so there's demanded what they saw as their constitutional rights as american citizens to take their property, including slave property, and to territories and by the entire nation. in 1857 in the famous or infamous stretched out decision the united states supreme court affirmed the seven constitutional views. republicans, in contrast, said never. no matter the supreme court. republicans would allow no more slaves in any territory. abraham lincoln was elected in november of 1860. one month later the united states congress came into session. members of congress put forth various compromise proposals. a critical portion of all dealing with the division of the territories, most often a proposal to extend some kind of dividing line westward beyond the louisiana purchase all the way to the border of california. nabil after this rather lengthy preface i'm
it did not include california because california, as you know, was already a state. the crescent -- the question was so critical because it had to do with the feature slavery and the future of southern power in the nation. so there's demanded what they saw as their constitutional rights as american citizens to take their property, including slave property, and to territories and by the entire nation. in 1857 in the famous or infamous stretched out decision the united states supreme court...
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Dec 9, 2012
12/12
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>> i met him at an event i did when i was working in southern california and one thing led to another. i moved back to new york. i am from new york and started working at "forbes" of the pr department. >> elizabeth ames, or practical experience, how do that that? >> i've learned a lot since "forbes." when i sat "forbes" islandwide about markets. again, i began as a journalist and worked at "businessweek" many years ago as a journalist. but when i started to work as an entrepreneur, i learned about the fact that you really need to have economic freedom to create jobs. something i learned personally. if you're obviously just getting a paycheck, you really don't understand how government can affect that firsthand. that was one of the things that led me to think this is a useful idea for a book. >> overall, philosophically, how do you see the role of government, the role of congress, the role of the president in the economy? >> basically this book raises and answers the question. we need government to create a stable environment for businesses to function and create jobs. when government
>> i met him at an event i did when i was working in southern california and one thing led to another. i moved back to new york. i am from new york and started working at "forbes" of the pr department. >> elizabeth ames, or practical experience, how do that that? >> i've learned a lot since "forbes." when i sat "forbes" islandwide about markets. again, i began as a journalist and worked at "businessweek" many years ago as a journalist....
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Dec 17, 2012
12/12
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eye 91
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she retired about, oh, almost 15 years ago now, and lives in california again. >> host: somebody you would have liked to talk to? >> guest: i would very much like to talk to her m one of the things that i think is really important is that an organization like hers, which was so involved, no foundational to conservative women's political activism, if prepares are not depositedded anywhere, they are not available to be read, other women who headed up on much smaller organizations talks to everybody. really someone like beverley and concernedded women for america deserve substantially more attention and for posterity should deposit papers so we can learn from them. >> host: a professor of law and professor of history here at the university of pennsylvania. this is her most recent book, "the spirit of the law: religious voices and the constitution in modern america," harvard university press, and also the author of "the mormon question," and you referredded to polygamy a couple times in the short discussion here. was that the issue about the mormons, that really kind of got under people'
she retired about, oh, almost 15 years ago now, and lives in california again. >> host: somebody you would have liked to talk to? >> guest: i would very much like to talk to her m one of the things that i think is really important is that an organization like hers, which was so involved, no foundational to conservative women's political activism, if prepares are not depositedded anywhere, they are not available to be read, other women who headed up on much smaller organizations...
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Dec 10, 2012
12/12
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who told -- i forgot his name, robinson of the call he'd run with first volunteer fire department in california and that was brodrick one. back in new york more tom was a runner, a porch boy coming it in the competition among brodrick came us to make his fortune, he basically wanted to be a senator. that's what his plan was. tom came along and an assortment of the weirdest guys you ever saw, the worlds ugliest man, have you a chance, murderous, gunslingers, conmen, just absolutely amazing people. i thought it got to write this. as i work in a release we are very close to it the tom sawyer met mark twain in may of 1863 about three blocks from here. the old thing in the same room. twain liked to talk to tom because tom movies free stories and they played cards and drink here matching campaign. so that was the genesis. i thought this has got to be written. so while the series of tiny bits and pieces, diaries and stuff; it's a. but this is a result. i took out as they do, 40,000 words. can you imagine? spicer have over shop may mark, but i do love it. it's the most fun. i guess they could read you
who told -- i forgot his name, robinson of the call he'd run with first volunteer fire department in california and that was brodrick one. back in new york more tom was a runner, a porch boy coming it in the competition among brodrick came us to make his fortune, he basically wanted to be a senator. that's what his plan was. tom came along and an assortment of the weirdest guys you ever saw, the worlds ugliest man, have you a chance, murderous, gunslingers, conmen, just absolutely amazing...
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Dec 23, 2012
12/12
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if you are sentenced to a jail term and california just in case that happens to anyone of you, you should know that if you don't like the standard accommodations you can buy a prison cell upgrade. it's true. for how much, do you suppose? how much do you think it costs? $5,000? $90 a night. or if you are a tourist suppose you go to washington, d.c. on the congressional hearing that there may be a very long line if it is a popular hearing. and you may not like standing in long lines you can now go to a company called line standing dhaka, and pay them a certain amount of money. they will hire someone usually a homeless person or someone that needs to work to hold the place on line for hours and hours overnight if need be. and when the hearing begins, you can take your place in the line and go into the hearing room. the same thing, you can do the same thing by the way, if you would rather sit in an oral argument before the u.s. supreme court. a longstanding dhaka, or suppose you want to contribute to a alleviating a social tragedy in this country. each year thousands of babies born to a drug-
if you are sentenced to a jail term and california just in case that happens to anyone of you, you should know that if you don't like the standard accommodations you can buy a prison cell upgrade. it's true. for how much, do you suppose? how much do you think it costs? $5,000? $90 a night. or if you are a tourist suppose you go to washington, d.c. on the congressional hearing that there may be a very long line if it is a popular hearing. and you may not like standing in long lines you can now...
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Dec 1, 2012
12/12
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there's something called the leonard law that applies the first amendment standards in california universities. but the private universities are bound by their own promises in the growing language those are enforceable contracts in the states particularly in massachusetts and new york by the way those are in forcible. but it's not just the legal enforceability it is their moral power. and believe me i know this from experience. columbia, harvard, yale do not like being called up. it is harder. it is a harder road but you're holding them against their own values and people within that university who know they are wrong. you've mentioned a lot about the cases. the universities that have violated the free-speech laws that have broken their contractual agreements. can you name any of the universities that have model free-speech codes in the first amendment? >> it's kind of funny because we rate the coverage is according to the system i came up with. we talk about 65% we are talking about the red light university. is it 16 greenlight colleges? but that doesn't put a very good colleges, dartmouth. b
there's something called the leonard law that applies the first amendment standards in california universities. but the private universities are bound by their own promises in the growing language those are enforceable contracts in the states particularly in massachusetts and new york by the way those are in forcible. but it's not just the legal enforceability it is their moral power. and believe me i know this from experience. columbia, harvard, yale do not like being called up. it is harder....
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Dec 15, 2012
12/12
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in what is a very unsatisfactory ending. >> host: charles, lori, california. and afternoon tea. >> caller: a wonderful, wonderful book. very compelling. my question is, i heard an interview with president obama talk about the facts that it really >> host: charles, california. would not have helped in this situation because companies that acted a little different than companies, you know, like coleman, investment banks. can you explain a little bit about the prevention of these problems? and now you have gained a lot of financial education since he started. can you explain a little bit about how that work. >> sure. glass stiegel was the depression-era law that separated investment banks from commercial banks. so it put a -- it meant that, well, you know, basically a bank like chase could not also do investment banking activities and also in other areas like insurance. that bill really got dismantle by a series of regulatory decisions by the fed meeting of to the very end of the clinton administration where the last vestiges were basically voted or removed, torn
in what is a very unsatisfactory ending. >> host: charles, lori, california. and afternoon tea. >> caller: a wonderful, wonderful book. very compelling. my question is, i heard an interview with president obama talk about the facts that it really >> host: charles, california. would not have helped in this situation because companies that acted a little different than companies, you know, like coleman, investment banks. can you explain a little bit about the prevention of these...
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Dec 9, 2012
12/12
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200 acres was equal to all real-estate of california. that was very old school to talk about it. >> when you talk to fed officials. >> i am off the record. [laughter] >> host: but not now. you have a microphone. [laughter] but when i do the rio the frustration of the criticism there easing too much to say that is the only course of action in the face of a political class not doing much. >> they get it both directions but if you think you can it you are right they have a lot of criticism last few days from the emerging countries that somehow the measures the federal reserve is undermining the prospects for the developing world. we have a responsibility. but i don't understand. it is pretty wild with the causes and the fact and chairman bernanke said the other day that they aim for a policy that in the long run will help everybody. that is the tricky part. >> the lead bidder not, it sounds nice. you don't want to criticize bernanke of last. >> he really is a nice guy despite the press. [laughter] but what is important is that he wrote to a
200 acres was equal to all real-estate of california. that was very old school to talk about it. >> when you talk to fed officials. >> i am off the record. [laughter] >> host: but not now. you have a microphone. [laughter] but when i do the rio the frustration of the criticism there easing too much to say that is the only course of action in the face of a political class not doing much. >> they get it both directions but if you think you can it you are right they have a...
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Dec 30, 2012
12/12
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think it is, of the san francisco call that he'd run with the very first volunteer fire department in california. and that was broderick i. back in new york where tom was a runner, torch boy, he had been in competition with broderick, and when broderick came west to make his fortune, he basically wanted to be a senator, that's what his plan was, and he did become a senator. tom came along, and an assortment of the weirdest guys you ever saw, the world's ugliest man, heavyweight champs, murderers, con men, i mean, just absolutely amazing people, i thought, well, i've got to write this. and as i'm working i realize -- and we are very close to it -- tom sawyer actually met mark twain in may of 1863 a about three blocks from here. in a steam room. and twain liked to talk to tom because tom knew these great stories. and they played cards and drank beer and went out drinking at night. so that was the genesis of it. i thought this has got to be written. so all these years of finding little bits and pieces of diaries, and that's how long it took. so this is the result. and i took out, as i do overdo stu
think it is, of the san francisco call that he'd run with the very first volunteer fire department in california. and that was broderick i. back in new york where tom was a runner, torch boy, he had been in competition with broderick, and when broderick came west to make his fortune, he basically wanted to be a senator, that's what his plan was, and he did become a senator. tom came along, and an assortment of the weirdest guys you ever saw, the world's ugliest man, heavyweight champs,...
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Dec 15, 2012
12/12
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it's for the proposed ivan power solar power project in the desert in southern california. an e-mail from bright source energy's subcontractor, bechtel systems and infrastructure, dated december 2, 2009, said that biden met weekly with energy secretary steven chu to discuss the energy department loan guarantees. bernard tune who was biden's chief of staff when he was a senator in the senate was a principal vice president and manager for bechtel. in an e-mail to bright source ceo john woolard dated december 3, 2009, tune wrote, quote: calls are in to biden's staff, and i will be approaching the political affairs office at the white house tomorrow as well. as this prompt could benefit -- project could benefit two democratic senators who are in cycle and whose races already tough next year, barbara boxer of california and majority leader senator reid from nevada. both won re-election in 2010. over a year later, in march 2011, bright source still had no loan. ceo woolard sent an e-mail to jonathan silva who was energy director of the energy department's loan guarantee program.
it's for the proposed ivan power solar power project in the desert in southern california. an e-mail from bright source energy's subcontractor, bechtel systems and infrastructure, dated december 2, 2009, said that biden met weekly with energy secretary steven chu to discuss the energy department loan guarantees. bernard tune who was biden's chief of staff when he was a senator in the senate was a principal vice president and manager for bechtel. in an e-mail to bright source ceo john woolard...
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Dec 23, 2012
12/12
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. >> host: we have charles from la jolla, california. >> caller: thank you, neil barofsky. it was a wonderful book. it was very compelling. my question is, in an interview with president obama, he talks about situation and you have companies like aig that after the little differently. companies like goldman sachs that were in investment banking. could you explain more about that? i know you have gained a lot of financial education since he started as the t.a.r.p. general. could you explain how this will work? >> yes, glass-steagall was the law that separated investment banks and commercial banks. so it meant that basically a big like citibank or jpmorgan chase could not also do investment banking activities. also in other areas like insurance. that bill really got dismantled by a series of regulatory deficiencies by the feds leading up to the end of the clinton administration for the last messages were basically torn apart by legislation. the way president obama is referring to it, and he is accurate, some of the biggest classes didn't happen from commercial banks. but also
. >> host: we have charles from la jolla, california. >> caller: thank you, neil barofsky. it was a wonderful book. it was very compelling. my question is, in an interview with president obama, he talks about situation and you have companies like aig that after the little differently. companies like goldman sachs that were in investment banking. could you explain more about that? i know you have gained a lot of financial education since he started as the t.a.r.p. general. could you...
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Dec 10, 2012
12/12
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we need to relax and actually listen to the people of california. you think the average latino likes to fight that the unified is a disaster? they like the fact that sacramento is owned by the lobbyist? you think there's a thrill to pay higher and higher taxes for fewer and fewer jobs? they don't have any sense that they are allowed to have a conversation with us. that may be searched with a string of sitting down in the states saying tell me about your dreams, tell me about your dreams. i think he would be shocked to read and become a distributor by can't use the guy's name, he's a democratic consultant, and it wouldn't be fair to him because he told me one night he had to be hired by the traditional party which run mexico since 1929. she went down -- this was just before the reform to get. he went down because they were in deep trouble and the one to the clever american advice. he said you know we have a little problem. it's called corruption. and the guys he was talking to were the ones that were corrupt. [laughter] and they said to him -- she sa
we need to relax and actually listen to the people of california. you think the average latino likes to fight that the unified is a disaster? they like the fact that sacramento is owned by the lobbyist? you think there's a thrill to pay higher and higher taxes for fewer and fewer jobs? they don't have any sense that they are allowed to have a conversation with us. that may be searched with a string of sitting down in the states saying tell me about your dreams, tell me about your dreams. i...
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Dec 26, 2012
12/12
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eye 140
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tom sawyer robinson, i think it is, that he had run with the very first volunteer fire department in california. back in new york where tom was a torch boy, he had been in competition with broderick. when he came west to make his fortune, he basically wanted to be a senator. tom came along and an assortment of the weirdest guys you ever saw -- heavyweight champs, gunslingers, con men, absolutely amazing people. and we are very close to it. that tom sawyer actually met him in may of 19 -- 1863. mark twain like to talk to tom because tom knew great stories. all these little little bits and pieces and stories, that is how long it took, 15 years. can you imagine? i do love it. it is so fun. i guess i could read you some now if you would like. this may take a second. i have never read in public before. so i will start with a quote from tom sawyer. here it is. if you want to know how to i come to figure in his book, eat knowledge of the reporter and raise his brandy. they were speaking of mark twain, of course. as i said, we moved on to telling stories. sam was mighty fond of children and whenever he
tom sawyer robinson, i think it is, that he had run with the very first volunteer fire department in california. back in new york where tom was a torch boy, he had been in competition with broderick. when he came west to make his fortune, he basically wanted to be a senator. tom came along and an assortment of the weirdest guys you ever saw -- heavyweight champs, gunslingers, con men, absolutely amazing people. and we are very close to it. that tom sawyer actually met him in may of 19 -- 1863....
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Dec 25, 2012
12/12
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>> orange county, california. the state court, and over twenty five years, pretty much did everything as a part of that, you know, churning low level drug offenders through the system. it didn't take long that it wasn't working. robbers, rapers, murders being able to state and get a lot less accountability because we're spending the . >> what was your attitude toward drug lawbreakers, i guess? >> well, you know, so you to uphold the laws. and i raise my hand to protect and defnld the constitutions as well as the state laws. that doesn't mean i have to do it privately or quietly. i would do that, but you can't escape drug cases. in juvenile court -- probate you can't escape them. nevertheless, i was able. i see myself as a beered ageing ing a at a timer what we're doing isn't working. we couldn't do it worse if we tried. ask mexico. that's 60,000 people died a violent death in the last five or six years because the war on drugs and it has nothing do with drugs. it has everything to do with drug money and it's our d
>> orange county, california. the state court, and over twenty five years, pretty much did everything as a part of that, you know, churning low level drug offenders through the system. it didn't take long that it wasn't working. robbers, rapers, murders being able to state and get a lot less accountability because we're spending the . >> what was your attitude toward drug lawbreakers, i guess? >> well, you know, so you to uphold the laws. and i raise my hand to protect and...
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Dec 25, 2012
12/12
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he went to the people of california and said look here is where we are. it's a bigger mess than we thought. i can't fix it any other way. ic we have to do this. he did that after create agency -- nobody thought ronald reagan was raising taxes to create a bigger government. they thought if he needed it, it must be serious. what we have today is no innovation. no reform, no new thinking, no creativity, no hearings on waste. no hearings of better ways of doings things. you live until the age of the ipad and the iphone, and of google and a facebook and twitter, and you're faced with a federal government which currently runs at the pace of manual typewriter. [laughter] you have no serious -- in that sense we're told by people who are running a disaster we need more of your money to prop up a disaster. we can't reform. it's a bipartisan failure. now the last thing i want it talk about is how washington would have dealt with this. washington is the most important single american. we would not have won the american revolutionary war without him. we might well not
he went to the people of california and said look here is where we are. it's a bigger mess than we thought. i can't fix it any other way. ic we have to do this. he did that after create agency -- nobody thought ronald reagan was raising taxes to create a bigger government. they thought if he needed it, it must be serious. what we have today is no innovation. no reform, no new thinking, no creativity, no hearings on waste. no hearings of better ways of doings things. you live until the age of...
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Dec 8, 2012
12/12
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he was governor of california. i lived in california. he was once a democrat. i once bought a counterfeit watch in times square. same thing. everybody makes mistakes. as an actor he starred oppose a three foot harry chimp named bonds so, i work with bob beckel. no, no, no, that was cheap. that was cheap. the only reason i i can make the joke about bob is he is a lovable guy. are we going to make this speech about bob? i will. i got nothing to do. i will be here all night. bob is a great guy. he will say why did you defend me? bob is a great guy. bob performs a service. i should shut up. i should just quit. another thing i have in common with ronald reagan, he championed trickle-down economics. i have a weak bladder. june 12th, 1987, he told mchale gorbachev to tear down this wall. i like vodka. he called russia an evil empire. every day i call dana trio an evil person. i know you think she's adorable and she talks about that dog. why is. you guys actually think jasper is a dog? that is an armenian man that she hired as an indentured servant and wearing a fur co
he was governor of california. i lived in california. he was once a democrat. i once bought a counterfeit watch in times square. same thing. everybody makes mistakes. as an actor he starred oppose a three foot harry chimp named bonds so, i work with bob beckel. no, no, no, that was cheap. that was cheap. the only reason i i can make the joke about bob is he is a lovable guy. are we going to make this speech about bob? i will. i got nothing to do. i will be here all night. bob is a great guy. he...
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Dec 30, 2012
12/12
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and unless we get our act together, look at the california republican party. you think finding the right individual is going to turn around the largest state in the country? it's going to take a serious, deep, fundamental rethinking. now, unfortunately, i've been around so long i was there for the rebounded after goldwater which took a total of four years, i was there for the rebounded after watergate which took six years, i was there after george bush lost in '92 which took two years, and i was there after we lost the house in '06 which took four years. so if you said to me am i strategically optimistic, sure. they've got to govern. the world's not going to be kind to obama. they'll have plenty of mistakes. the challenge is not what they will do wrong. the challenge is whether we're prepared to slow down, think, have honest arguments and figure out what we need to do right. if we do that, this country will be just fine. thank you very, very much. [applause] >> for more information about newt gingrich, visit gingrichproductions.com. >> you think of washington
and unless we get our act together, look at the california republican party. you think finding the right individual is going to turn around the largest state in the country? it's going to take a serious, deep, fundamental rethinking. now, unfortunately, i've been around so long i was there for the rebounded after goldwater which took a total of four years, i was there for the rebounded after watergate which took six years, i was there after george bush lost in '92 which took two years, and i...
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Dec 15, 2012
12/12
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eye 148
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who told -- robinson i think was -- that he had run with the very first volunteer fire department in california and that was robert moline. back in new york where tom was a runner, for july, he had been in competition with broderick and when he came west to make his fortune he basically wanted to be a senator. that was his plan and he became a senator and tom came along and an assortment of the weirdest guys you ever saw, the world's ugliest man, heavyweight champs, gunslingers, con men, absolutely amazing people. i got to write this. as i am working i realize we are very close, tom sawyer actually match mark twain 1863 about three blocks from here, the old building, in a steam room, and mark twain liked to talk to tom. they played cards and drank beer and played dice. that was the genesis of it. this has got to be written. all these years of finding little bits of pieces of diaries and stuff. this is the results. i took out 40,000 words. can you imagine? that is how i overshot the mark. i do love it. is fun. and i guess i could reduce some now if you like. it may take a second. i have never re
who told -- robinson i think was -- that he had run with the very first volunteer fire department in california and that was robert moline. back in new york where tom was a runner, for july, he had been in competition with broderick and when he came west to make his fortune he basically wanted to be a senator. that was his plan and he became a senator and tom came along and an assortment of the weirdest guys you ever saw, the world's ugliest man, heavyweight champs, gunslingers, con men,...
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488
Dec 15, 2012
12/12
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eye 488
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i think brigham young hope that the experience could be like that of california. former state government and then be let into the union has an equal, sovereign state. the u.s. government is not interested. the mormons ask for a huge swath of territory in the southwest. u.s. government does not want to give them that much land, does not like the word, does not really want to let a mormon controlled state into the union demand so instead the territory of utah is created. the u.s. government do what president fell more does appointed brigham young as his first governor. >> the appoints. >> he appoints. >> how long did he serve as governor? >> he served six years. >> was the head of the mormon church at the same time. >> absolutely. >> was their political infighting within the mormon church? >> not really. he saw to it that he did not have any significant rivals. there were people who put themselves forward as possible leaders after his death, but by the time brigham young infection reaches utah he has eliminated most dissent. he brags that the church does not experie
i think brigham young hope that the experience could be like that of california. former state government and then be let into the union has an equal, sovereign state. the u.s. government is not interested. the mormons ask for a huge swath of territory in the southwest. u.s. government does not want to give them that much land, does not like the word, does not really want to let a mormon controlled state into the union demand so instead the territory of utah is created. the u.s. government do...
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Dec 24, 2012
12/12
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ronald reagan from california. first george bush, texas by a connecticut. bill clinton from arkansas, and the second bush from texas. so 2008 is in some ways a watershed election. it is this 40 year period of sun belt dominance. and there were issues that are critical in the politics that develop, that came out of the sun belt. they tended to have a conservative task to them. they tended to be oriented around history of strong national defense, of an opposition to unions and a defense of free enterprise politics. and also it's in the sun belt, in the south and southwest that we see the rise of what we see by the 1970s is becoming to talk about as the religious right, the rise of evangelical involved in the clinical process in new and important ways. so thurmond was at the forefront of all of those issues in his own politics. national defense, he was a staunch anti-communist. he played an important role in right wing anti-communist populist politics in the late '50s and early 1960s. it's one of the things that led him to switch parties in 1964. he was a key
ronald reagan from california. first george bush, texas by a connecticut. bill clinton from arkansas, and the second bush from texas. so 2008 is in some ways a watershed election. it is this 40 year period of sun belt dominance. and there were issues that are critical in the politics that develop, that came out of the sun belt. they tended to have a conservative task to them. they tended to be oriented around history of strong national defense, of an opposition to unions and a defense of free...
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Dec 8, 2012
12/12
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i'm something in the chair on my train just rattling along the heading out of california, my first date for the center of oregon and all i'm hearing from that fat little man who bubbles with fine political advice and fumes about my enemies is the press boys are going wild with this thing. i can feel my eyes glancing at the headline in the left-wing smeared sheet the new york post, secret ridge man's trust fund keep nixon in style far beyond his salary, that was one bastard of a headline. that in many ways is the point at which the crisis is instigated. i am trying to get into the mindset of richard nixon and tell the story in part through his eyes and his own experience and to a certain extent being for the guy who is having a nervous breakdown and career killing moment in what he takes to be a very important -- we all take to be a very important political career. i wanted to use the novelistic approach but i also wanted to have big themes by telling this story and what i figured i would do now is just kind of tell you about some of those big seams of interest to people who go to places
i'm something in the chair on my train just rattling along the heading out of california, my first date for the center of oregon and all i'm hearing from that fat little man who bubbles with fine political advice and fumes about my enemies is the press boys are going wild with this thing. i can feel my eyes glancing at the headline in the left-wing smeared sheet the new york post, secret ridge man's trust fund keep nixon in style far beyond his salary, that was one bastard of a headline. that...
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Dec 24, 2012
12/12
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i think brigham young thinks that doesn't get's experience is that of california. former state government and then led into the union as a equal sovereign state. the government is not interested. the mormons ask for a huge swath he doesn't want to get d.c. doesn't like the word desert at. he doesn't want a mormon controlled state into the state of the union and so it is said the territory of utah is created. the u.s. government, the president fillmore was a point brigham young has the governor. >> he appoints him. >> how long that brigham young served as governor? >> he served six years as governor. spain was he the head of the church at the time? >> absolutely. >> was their political insight within the church and did he have rifles? >> not really he felt that he didn't have any rivals within the church especially after they get to utah. there are other people that put themselves forward as possible leaders after joseph smith's death, but at the time brigham young's faction of the church reaches utah, he has eliminated most dissent. in fact she brags that the churc
i think brigham young thinks that doesn't get's experience is that of california. former state government and then led into the union as a equal sovereign state. the government is not interested. the mormons ask for a huge swath he doesn't want to get d.c. doesn't like the word desert at. he doesn't want a mormon controlled state into the state of the union and so it is said the territory of utah is created. the u.s. government, the president fillmore was a point brigham young has the governor....
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Dec 16, 2012
12/12
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imperial palace in tokyo, and a few hundred acres was equal to the value of all the real estate in california. now, that was real -- i don't know if it was true, but each to talk about -- but even to talk about it was a sense of how extremely -- [inaudible] >> do you share the, when you talk to fed officials, do you share -- >> i'm off the record here? >> no, not now. [laughter] no, no, you're fully mic'd. [laughter] when i talk to a fed official up there because happens to be power within the cia, um, they reveal and betray certain kind of frustration with the criticism they've been subjected including the criticism that they're easing too much because they say, well, that was the only course of action. we couldn't have done anything else in the face of a pretty -- political class. do you share that? >> well, they got it in both directions, and, you know, i don't think you should just act because you're getting a lot of criticism and people are impatient. but if you really think you can accomplish something, you act. now, they get a lot of criticism, it just happened to be in the papers in t
imperial palace in tokyo, and a few hundred acres was equal to the value of all the real estate in california. now, that was real -- i don't know if it was true, but each to talk about -- but even to talk about it was a sense of how extremely -- [inaudible] >> do you share the, when you talk to fed officials, do you share -- >> i'm off the record here? >> no, not now. [laughter] no, no, you're fully mic'd. [laughter] when i talk to a fed official up there because happens to be...
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Dec 15, 2012
12/12
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>> guest: california. c-span: where? >> guest: los angeles. c-span: how long did you live there? >> guest: lived there till i was 16, then i went away to boarding school for two years, came east to college, moved to new york right after college and, basically, have lived in new york ever since then. c-span: where'd you go to college? >> guest: i went to radcliffe. c-span: studied what? >> guest: english literature. not exactly preparation for the--it was preparation for the james family, which was my last book, but, no, i had--the morgans were quite an education for me. c-span: one of the things you mention on a couple of occasions is he was always playing solitaire. >> guest: yes. c-span: does that say something about him? >> guest: well, i think it does. again, because he says so little, it's hard to know. i'm just guessing. but one of his friends said this, and i think it's quite true, 'he was a man who was very intuitive and instinctive. he couldn't sit down and rationally analyze a problem. or if he could, he couldn't tell you about it.' one of his partners said, 'he's an im
>> guest: california. c-span: where? >> guest: los angeles. c-span: how long did you live there? >> guest: lived there till i was 16, then i went away to boarding school for two years, came east to college, moved to new york right after college and, basically, have lived in new york ever since then. c-span: where'd you go to college? >> guest: i went to radcliffe. c-span: studied what? >> guest: english literature. not exactly preparation for the--it was...
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Dec 31, 2012
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it's folks in california. and his job was to follow data centers. and now he looks at both utility aspects of data centers and, um, their i'm sorry t. practices -- i.t. practices, you know, their computer practices. and what he's talking about is this growth has happened behind the scenes so quickly and with so little scrutiny that some of these practices that he sees as extremely wasteful are taking them into a realm of energy usage which he didn't think they'll be able to sustain. one, because it'll be too expensive, two, probably because they'll get more scrutiny as those numbers increase and, three, i didn't talk about this with him, but other sources have told me that competition is going to start to play a role here, that people who learn, companies who learn and decide to put into practice ways to reduce those amounts are going to have a competitive advantage. so i think all of those things are what he means by unsustainable. >> host: and finally, james glanz, you also write that ha there are other 2,000 -- that there are over 2,000 federal d
it's folks in california. and his job was to follow data centers. and now he looks at both utility aspects of data centers and, um, their i'm sorry t. practices -- i.t. practices, you know, their computer practices. and what he's talking about is this growth has happened behind the scenes so quickly and with so little scrutiny that some of these practices that he sees as extremely wasteful are taking them into a realm of energy usage which he didn't think they'll be able to sustain. one,...
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Dec 22, 2012
12/12
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getting to face california the way. the biggest factor was the fact that now so many more people can view it. now you just, just of a 2 million people there for obama's inauguration four years ago, by far the biggest. its skin -- they can give out all the like. one letter and 40-150000 tickets and the rest of the people to show up and stand there. when they used to be on the side there weren't more than about 20,000 people who could you the actual ceremony. more could be present for the parade and oftentimes there were more than a million people for the parade, but not the ceremony itself. >> are all the pictures you showed on the slides in your book? >> not quite, but many of them yes. i have many pictures in my book that are not part of the slide show. there were some here that are not in the book. if you take a look at the book you will see. there are more than 50 pictures about. >> they say it costs a lot. i don't have an exact figure, but i would hope it would it would be somewhat scaled back, not only because of t
getting to face california the way. the biggest factor was the fact that now so many more people can view it. now you just, just of a 2 million people there for obama's inauguration four years ago, by far the biggest. its skin -- they can give out all the like. one letter and 40-150000 tickets and the rest of the people to show up and stand there. when they used to be on the side there weren't more than about 20,000 people who could you the actual ceremony. more could be present for the parade...
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Dec 16, 2012
12/12
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then governor of california. need while the affair with the housekeeper is five pages of the book. he deals with it. he made a mistake. he regrets it. it is what people say in those situations. i interviewed him on the phone the friday before he already agreed to be on "60 minutes." midway through the interview, i should not imitate him he said i don't like the way the interview is going he thought too many questions about the housekeeper and not his accomplishments. if you like arnold schwarzenegger it is there. >> host: political pundits including charles murray" coming apart." and rachel matt dow " drift" and ann coulter mug to. they always make the best seller list for a couple of weeks? >> she had switched publishers because at one point if you put a book with her name and her face on the cover it is dead guaranteed sales of six figures that has been dropping over time but this seems she had to abut the rhetoric to sell fewer and fewer copies. it will be interesting to see what she does for the next book and how far she is willing to go. >> rachel when don beyond the usual pun
then governor of california. need while the affair with the housekeeper is five pages of the book. he deals with it. he made a mistake. he regrets it. it is what people say in those situations. i interviewed him on the phone the friday before he already agreed to be on "60 minutes." midway through the interview, i should not imitate him he said i don't like the way the interview is going he thought too many questions about the housekeeper and not his accomplishments. if you like...
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Dec 25, 2012
12/12
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hollywood then was solidly, solidly republican, who loved herbert hoover of california. the outsider was becoming an insider and yet he refused to play by the rules. he refused to become part of the roosevelt team. he refused to unabashedly say whatever you in your brain trust what to do, call back and i must say. and yet he was so important to roosevelt as a banker and it's an irish catholic and an incredibly smart man that roosevelt appointed him the first chairman of the securities and exchange commission at the time roosevelts colleagues and new dealers were horrified. why are you putting a fox in control of the chickens. and joseph kennedy was the greatest chairman of the fcc we've ever seen. he knew every trick of the trade and he passed so many regulations, such tough regulations that when he was finished, he had to get out of the market because every device used to make his millions he had outlawed. from the moment he left the fcc, he began investigating real estate, let the merchandise mart in chicago, the largest building outside the pentagon in the country and
hollywood then was solidly, solidly republican, who loved herbert hoover of california. the outsider was becoming an insider and yet he refused to play by the rules. he refused to become part of the roosevelt team. he refused to unabashedly say whatever you in your brain trust what to do, call back and i must say. and yet he was so important to roosevelt as a banker and it's an irish catholic and an incredibly smart man that roosevelt appointed him the first chairman of the securities and...
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Dec 23, 2012
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he becomes a movie star and then becomes governor of california. meanwhile, this is an affair with the housekeeper about five pages in the book. and he deals with it doesn't say much, makes a mistake, regrets it in those situations. i got an interview with him on the phone friday before the book was coming out. he already agreed to be on 60 minutes and they had a lot more time. midway through the interview he said i don't -- and i cannot do arnold well. he said i don't like to read this interview is going because he thought to many questions have to do with the housekeeper, not about his accomplishments as governor. if you like arnold shorts and bigger, it's all there. it briefly made our bestseller lists and then went away. >> host: political pundits. we get the political pundits books every year including charles murray's coming apart, state of white america. glenn beck howard, america would be a racial motto, drift and and coulter, mugged. did either of you pick up any of these books? there was the best seller for a couple weeks, don't they? >>
he becomes a movie star and then becomes governor of california. meanwhile, this is an affair with the housekeeper about five pages in the book. and he deals with it doesn't say much, makes a mistake, regrets it in those situations. i got an interview with him on the phone friday before the book was coming out. he already agreed to be on 60 minutes and they had a lot more time. midway through the interview he said i don't -- and i cannot do arnold well. he said i don't like to read this...
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Dec 9, 2012
12/12
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and i think brigham young hoped that their expense could be like that of california. form a state government and then be led into the union as an equal sovereign state. u.s. government -- the mormons ask for a huge swath of territory. u.s. government doesn't want to give them that much land, doesn't like their work. doesn't want to let a mormon controlled state into the union and so it said the territory of utah is created. the u.s. government, president gore doesn't like brigham young. >> how long did brigham young serve as governor? >> he served six years as governor spent was the head of the church of the same time? >> absolutely. >> was there political infighting within the mormon church, brigham young, did he have rival? >> not really. he saw to it that he did not have any significant rivals within the church, especially after they get to utah. there are other people who put themselves forward as possible leaders after joseph smith's death, but by the time to brigham young's faction of the church reaches utah, he has eliminated most of the distant. in fact, he br
and i think brigham young hoped that their expense could be like that of california. form a state government and then be led into the union as an equal sovereign state. u.s. government -- the mormons ask for a huge swath of territory. u.s. government doesn't want to give them that much land, doesn't like their work. doesn't want to let a mormon controlled state into the union and so it said the territory of utah is created. the u.s. government, president gore doesn't like brigham young....
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Dec 30, 2012
12/12
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but i think with a lot of gun control measures, you support them in california. ronald reagan supported a gun-control measure because panthers are running around with guns in the state legislature sacramento. that's a lot that made it impossible to do that and imposed a waiting period on the time you needed between applying for a hand guns and actually being able to buy it. people say that lott will certainly stop the black panthers, but that law doesn't apply just to black panthers. eventually they backlash. well you know the social and political backlash to a lot of the things that happened and i think gun control is one of them. >> host: the 68 act dealt mainly with prohibited purchasers. so it was insane if you are a felon or habitual drug user or dishonorably discharged, mentally dangerous, they use different terminology, but went through a list of eight or nine sections of people that shouldn't be a debate guns. >> guest: but at the time it took a long time to do those checks and eventually that was replaced with a system we have now, which is fully automat
but i think with a lot of gun control measures, you support them in california. ronald reagan supported a gun-control measure because panthers are running around with guns in the state legislature sacramento. that's a lot that made it impossible to do that and imposed a waiting period on the time you needed between applying for a hand guns and actually being able to buy it. people say that lott will certainly stop the black panthers, but that law doesn't apply just to black panthers. eventually...
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Dec 16, 2012
12/12
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the carter years, the books written at the time about the islamic bomb and the words, a senator from california, allen cranston who had hearings about the threat from a pakistani bomb, and there was a sense that it was to be opposed, interventions, and -- >> asking why isn't israel concerned about the pakistani bomb? >> well, i was giving the american answer, but i think that the same parallel existed in israel at the time. why today? very good question. i think it believes that the united states, the u.s. relationship with pakistan and the effective american over the region as the preimminent military power is a prof lactic against the dangers of the bomb, and if they had their, you know, they would be happy if it disappeared, but they are pragmatic about the fact that it exists, and that there's nothing they can do about it, but they have energized, i think, their friends and supporters here to make sure there's a very active american policy, and probably, a lot of intelligence sharing to make sure that program doesn't become a threat to israel. first question -- >> american pressure to get c
the carter years, the books written at the time about the islamic bomb and the words, a senator from california, allen cranston who had hearings about the threat from a pakistani bomb, and there was a sense that it was to be opposed, interventions, and -- >> asking why isn't israel concerned about the pakistani bomb? >> well, i was giving the american answer, but i think that the same parallel existed in israel at the time. why today? very good question. i think it believes that the...
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Dec 24, 2012
12/12
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these crimes as horrible as the assassinations, but a lot of gun control measures to support them in california, ronald reagan supported the gun control measure because the black panthers were run around with guns and state legislature in sacramento. >> guest: they pass a law that made it hard or impossible to do that and the rating period on the time he needed to reapply for a handgun and actually being able to buy at and people said well, that will certainly stop the black panthers that doesn't apply just to the black panthers. it applies to everybody. will eventually you get a backlash, and there was the social and political backlash to a lot of the things that happened and i think gun-control was one of them. >> host: but the act dealt mainly with a list of prohibitive purchases. so, it wasn't saying if you are if felon or habitual drug user or dishonorably discharged or mentally dangerous the use different terminology but they went through a list of about eight or nine sections of people that shouldn't be able to buy guns. >> guest: but at that time it was -- it took a long time to do thos
these crimes as horrible as the assassinations, but a lot of gun control measures to support them in california, ronald reagan supported the gun control measure because the black panthers were run around with guns and state legislature in sacramento. >> guest: they pass a law that made it hard or impossible to do that and the rating period on the time he needed to reapply for a handgun and actually being able to buy at and people said well, that will certainly stop the black panthers that...
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Dec 29, 2012
12/12
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this is his dream, to become a movie star and he becomes a movie star and then he becomes governor of california. meanwhile the affair with the house speaker which is five pages in the book, he deals with it, doesn't say much, says he made a mistake, regrets it, does this sort of thing people say in those situations and i got an interview with him on the phone friday before the book came out. he already agreed to be on 60 minutes and they have a lot more time and midway through the interview, he said i cannot do arnold well. i don't like the way this interview is going. it is not about his accomplishments. if you like arnold schwarzenegger is all there. it made the best-seller list and went away. >> political pundits. always we get political pundit books every year including charles murray's coming apart, the state of white america, glen beck's power, marc levin, rachel matthau, drift and end coulter's mug. did you pick of these books? they always make a best seller list for a couple weeks. >> they do. looking specifically at the ann coulter book, she switched publishers because the one point an
this is his dream, to become a movie star and he becomes a movie star and then he becomes governor of california. meanwhile the affair with the house speaker which is five pages in the book, he deals with it, doesn't say much, says he made a mistake, regrets it, does this sort of thing people say in those situations and i got an interview with him on the phone friday before the book came out. he already agreed to be on 60 minutes and they have a lot more time and midway through the interview,...
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Dec 8, 2012
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end quote, jewish voice for peace in the article written after the first night of the university of california at berkeley hearings on divestment. she noted, and i have seen as well from sonoma county to the united methodist and presbyterian church's recent divestment hearings to the many others playing out on campuses from new york city to san diego that while on the one side you had a small group of isolated jewish students and leaders holding each other fearfully, on the other side you saw adiverse group of israelis, arabs, african-americans, latino and latina members, year allies holding hands in friendship, solidarity and anticipation. and as a young jewish american, this is what i want my place in the community and in the movement to look like. thank you. [applause] >> thank you very much, anna and norman, for those wonderful talks. the questions that we've received fall essentially into three categories. first, questions about the american jewish community and its relationship to israel, questions having to do with political strategy, for example, boycott and divestment sanctions, and t
end quote, jewish voice for peace in the article written after the first night of the university of california at berkeley hearings on divestment. she noted, and i have seen as well from sonoma county to the united methodist and presbyterian church's recent divestment hearings to the many others playing out on campuses from new york city to san diego that while on the one side you had a small group of isolated jewish students and leaders holding each other fearfully, on the other side you saw...
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Dec 24, 2012
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prospect in groups and told national groups of prospectors and we would be the court involved in one in california and even then this was 1973 perhaps 74, the environmentalists are trying to get the act revised to stop the ownership of the mining claims in the desert because of the king drew in danger on the desert and that was my introduction to the tension between the next u.s. and non-use from the environment lists are adamant they were going to wall off the entire mojave desert for use, and they did. in fact it became impossible to use recreational vehicles and to go out and maintain the plans that became more onerous so we wound up giving goes up. now of course, when they want to put the solar installation out there and they say yes that sounds like a great idea and they talk about things like gentle rolling on the top of the cactus that to 100 years to grow back and they relocate the tortoise is even though the mortality rate when they move them as ridiculously high and of course if you did maliciously you would be in jail and that no longer matters because they want their solar fields. and
prospect in groups and told national groups of prospectors and we would be the court involved in one in california and even then this was 1973 perhaps 74, the environmentalists are trying to get the act revised to stop the ownership of the mining claims in the desert because of the king drew in danger on the desert and that was my introduction to the tension between the next u.s. and non-use from the environment lists are adamant they were going to wall off the entire mojave desert for use, and...
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Dec 23, 2012
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you support them in california, ronald reagan supported a gun control measure because black panthers ran around with guns in the state legislature in sacramento. >> host: openly carrying the guns and in the pictures and everything. >> guest: passed a law making it harder, almost impossible to do that, imposing a waiting period between applying for a handgun and actually being able to buy it, and people say, oh, well that law will certainly stop the black panthers, but that law doesn't apply to just black panthers, but everybody. eventually, you get a black lash, and, well, you know, there's a social and political backlash in general to a lot of the things that happen, and i think gun control is one of them. >> host: the 68 act, i mean, that dealt mainly with the list of prohibitive purchasers; right? it was not saying that if you're a felon or habitual drag -- drug user or honorably discharged, dangerous, different terminology, but a list of eight or nine sections of people who should not be able to buy guns. >> guest: right, but at the time it was -- it took a long time to do those
you support them in california, ronald reagan supported a gun control measure because black panthers ran around with guns in the state legislature in sacramento. >> host: openly carrying the guns and in the pictures and everything. >> guest: passed a law making it harder, almost impossible to do that, imposing a waiting period between applying for a handgun and actually being able to buy it, and people say, oh, well that law will certainly stop the black panthers, but that law...
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Dec 24, 2012
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i think it's like with a lot of gun control measures, you support them in california, ronald reagan supported a gun control measure, and because black panthers were running around with guns in the state legislator in sacramento. >> host: carrying guns. >> guest: exactly. the law made it impossible to do that and imposed a waiting period on the time you needed between applying for a handgun and actually being able to buy it. and people say, oh, well, that law will certainly stop the black panthers. but that law doesn't apply just to black panthers. eventually you get a backlash, and there was a social and political backlash in general to a lot of the things that happened in the '60s, and i think gun control was one of them. so, -- >> host: the '68 act dealt with the list of prohibited purchasers. so it wasn't saying if you're a felon or habitual drug user, dishohn -- dishorn blue discharged, mentally ding you eight or nine sections of people that shouldn't be able to buy guns. >> guest: but at the time it was -- took a long time do those checks and right now the system we have now is fullly au
i think it's like with a lot of gun control measures, you support them in california, ronald reagan supported a gun control measure, and because black panthers were running around with guns in the state legislator in sacramento. >> host: carrying guns. >> guest: exactly. the law made it impossible to do that and imposed a waiting period on the time you needed between applying for a handgun and actually being able to buy it. and people say, oh, well, that law will certainly stop the...
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Dec 26, 2012
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as much to do with the success in 1964 in the land campaign and i found evidence of the ballot from california that had pictures of the alabama sinking and i think there was a powerful image and a powerful booster. i want you to in the by reading two things these terrific historians have written in their books. craig rights in the civil war at sea the naval forces did not determine the outcome of the civil war to the north would have won the war might even without the naval supremacy. but the naval forces affected its trajectory and very likely its length and that in the end was important enough. jim goes a little bit further, and i quote, to say the union army won the civil war would still the case much too strongly but it is accurate to say that couldn't have been without the contribution of the navy. we will let you fight it out on some future arena. but i will end officially by pointing something not be heard about this problem that they had with each other and these gentlemen are such good colleagues to me and each other jim mcpherson calls him the civil war at sea in his official apprais
as much to do with the success in 1964 in the land campaign and i found evidence of the ballot from california that had pictures of the alabama sinking and i think there was a powerful image and a powerful booster. i want you to in the by reading two things these terrific historians have written in their books. craig rights in the civil war at sea the naval forces did not determine the outcome of the civil war to the north would have won the war might even without the naval supremacy. but the...
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Dec 3, 2012
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we are off to the phones to california with beverly calling in. welcome. >>caller: hi how are c13 >>host: we are and who knew that electronics could be this fun right? >>caller: i know! [laughter] >>host: beverly what is going on? we heard you got yourself a today's special? >>caller: oh yes. in october my purse was stolen and in it was my kindle. i have been lost without it. i had an and i have the kindle act on it but it is just not the same as having kindle in my hand. ok what kind of kindle am i going to get? this is the best deal going. >>host: yrsh. >>caller: i did not think about it and picked up the phone and dialed. -- y eah >>caller: merry christmas to me. first of all thank you for your call and we are sorry to hear about the theft but how great you can replace it here at hsn. for people and have not tried a candle, it is the best and they are so much fun are they not? >>caller: oh they are. it is- wonderful to pick it up and read it and say okay at one to listen to it for while while i am washing dishes. or while i am cooking or doing something
we are off to the phones to california with beverly calling in. welcome. >>caller: hi how are c13 >>host: we are and who knew that electronics could be this fun right? >>caller: i know! [laughter] >>host: beverly what is going on? we heard you got yourself a today's special? >>caller: oh yes. in october my purse was stolen and in it was my kindle. i have been lost without it. i had an and i have the kindle act on it but it is just not the same as having kindle in...
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Dec 3, 2012
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open to interpretation and i don't know if you've been out to california but the getty museum in malibu, it does have a wonderful guarded area and it does have the geometric designs so that they are circles in the bushes and the hedges have been trimmed deny you do is go london internet search in malibu and you can see what i am talking about but it is just a spectacular piece very compelling and different and unique, it is open to interpretation, it truly is our what a 2-153 the do have a3 weight of 37 and the blue you have 29 points and in diamondback cents and we have all these sizes available? 6-eleven still available, get in on this price. this is last caller gemstone show of the year. you will not be seeing the color that and show every year. 21 not be getting the fact of the sales until february. i do want you to think ahead because you all sold new selection, if these prices may not be available so do not miss out on this. this fix easy to get it home, this is the real thing. this is precious metals, sterling silver with a broken it is in the platinum family makes it stronger an
open to interpretation and i don't know if you've been out to california but the getty museum in malibu, it does have a wonderful guarded area and it does have the geometric designs so that they are circles in the bushes and the hedges have been trimmed deny you do is go london internet search in malibu and you can see what i am talking about but it is just a spectacular piece very compelling and different and unique, it is open to interpretation, it truly is our what a 2-153 the do have a3...
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Dec 3, 2012
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you do love the caller if your favorite race set match in necklace are both of you can roseanne in california ordered the today's special and some of the matching goodies hello. welcome are you ordering herkimer for the first time? >>caller: this is the first time. took me so long because i am from her former county. >>guest: what a small world. >>caller:it is very pretty, pretty area of parry and >>caller: also bought the 24 in. necklace in the ring that colleen lopez had on. get in there is absolutely gorgeous. was a kid it wasc13 back but we used to coach was called little falls cents. these are gorges these are just gorgeous and this is just beautiful so i feel very fortunate to be able to get >>guest: in on it is cool because this will mean something special to you, this is a slice of the past. >>guest: that is very cool and i am glad that you join the club. >>caller: thank you for bringing them to hsn . >>host:enjoy your holidays. and thank you for the call in you ladies, that is where i feel like i get my, those kinds of stories and think you for calling in sharing and enjoying what we
you do love the caller if your favorite race set match in necklace are both of you can roseanne in california ordered the today's special and some of the matching goodies hello. welcome are you ordering herkimer for the first time? >>caller: this is the first time. took me so long because i am from her former county. >>guest: what a small world. >>caller:it is very pretty, pretty area of parry and >>caller: also bought the 24 in. necklace in the ring that colleen lopez...
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Dec 29, 2012
12/12
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and then he ended his career at compton college in southern california. c-span: and who is gloria skinner? >> guest: my mother. and so i had somewhat of a stage mother who--she's also very proud of the book, but she encouraged me in not only academics but public speaking and drama and other activities. and... c-span: what did--what was her career? >> guest: she sometimes was a homemaker; a lot of times she worked in child care, in that field, and that's what she did for most of her career. she ran a day-care center, a very successful one, that she started. she's extremely independent, so she started her own business and--and--and that worked well for her. c-span: and you say they were both civil rights activists. >> guest: mm-hmm. c-span: now did they have any problem with you getting close to ronald reagan on all this? >> guest: no, because--i think especially because they see this as a scholarly project, but then i think they would--wouldn't mind what i would do if i was doing it from an informed standpoint. but i think they're pleased with the scholarl
and then he ended his career at compton college in southern california. c-span: and who is gloria skinner? >> guest: my mother. and so i had somewhat of a stage mother who--she's also very proud of the book, but she encouraged me in not only academics but public speaking and drama and other activities. and... c-span: what did--what was her career? >> guest: she sometimes was a homemaker; a lot of times she worked in child care, in that field, and that's what she did for most of her...
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Dec 1, 2012
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i went to berkeley, california, where i spent eight months doing secondary sources in the bancroft library there, which is famous for its western collection. but i had to go to a number of repositories of original documents; for example, monroe, michigan, where both the custers grew up, both george armstrong and his wife; to yale for some significant letters; certainly to west point; to new york public library; and, of course, to washington, dc, to the national archives and the library of congress. c-span: where'd you find the most material that was useful primary material? >> guest: well, certainly the battlefield archive has the largest amount. but monroe, michigan, and the national archives would follow the battlefield. c-span: you've got a picture in here of general custer's wife at what age? >> guest: she's 22 in that picture. c-span: where did they meet? >> guest: in monroe, michigan, where she was a native, and he moved there following his sister and her husband. and eventually his whole family moved to monroe from ohio where he had been born. c-span: wasn't there a dispute about th
i went to berkeley, california, where i spent eight months doing secondary sources in the bancroft library there, which is famous for its western collection. but i had to go to a number of repositories of original documents; for example, monroe, michigan, where both the custers grew up, both george armstrong and his wife; to yale for some significant letters; certainly to west point; to new york public library; and, of course, to washington, dc, to the national archives and the library of...
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Dec 25, 2012
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. >> most power of state like california today. it's the founding father of the republican party. it's only the second presidential election. sue ward is the dominant figure in the republican party. it sort of his he is more significant than any two other figures in the party combined. chase, another alternative is perhaps the man chiefly responsible for the republican party in ohio and much of the midwest and also a big state. and still perhaps americas one of the most famous apt slavery advocate. famous as a radical ab list in nist. he was perceived to be that way because of a series of features he had given. lincoln on the other hand because he didn't have a national record could convincingly portray himself as the least radical the least antislavery republican. who is up for the race. so they go in and sue ward doesn't just have the advantage of being the dominant republican and being the governor and senator from new york. he also have -- weed is the name. fan fastic name. it's like tom wolf. perfectly portrays hawaii, you know, nature. he's the fine -- mid 19th merge has to
. >> most power of state like california today. it's the founding father of the republican party. it's only the second presidential election. sue ward is the dominant figure in the republican party. it sort of his he is more significant than any two other figures in the party combined. chase, another alternative is perhaps the man chiefly responsible for the republican party in ohio and much of the midwest and also a big state. and still perhaps americas one of the most famous apt slavery...